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For immediate release: November 15, 2006
Contact: Dan Favre, Gulf Restoration Network, 504-525-1528, 401-965-7908 (cell)
The Cypress
Mulch Industry Threatens Coastal Protection in Louisiana
Coalition Calls on Wal-Mart, Home
Depot and Lowe’s to Stop Selling Cypress Mulch
New Orleans, LA-
The Save Our Cypress Coalition, a group of local and regional environmental
groups in Louisiana, is publicly requesting Wal-Mart, Home Depot and Lowe’s
immediately cease all sales of cypress mulch products. Louisiana’s endangered cypress-tupelo swamps
are being clear-cut to feed an unsustainable and unnecessary cypress mulch
industry.
“As the nation’s largest retailers, Wal-Mart, Home Depot and
Lowe’s have the power to dramatically reduce needless destruction of our
cypress forests,” said Leslie March, Chair of the Delta (Louisiana) Chapter of
the Sierra Club, “We are calling on these three retailers to live up to their
corporate policies of sustainability to help save Louisiana’s coast.”
The Save Our Cypress Coalition is asking the retailers to
stop selling all cypress mulch products until a credible, third-party
certification system is operating to ensure that no cypress mulch products are
being sourced from non-renewable cypress swamps.
“Cypress forests are an
important barrier to hurricane storm surge,” explained Gary Shaffer, PhD., from
Southeastern Louisiana University,
“Satellite imagery shows that most trees in Katrina’s path were downed while
contiguous cypress forests stood strong and actually protected the rest of the
ecosystem.”
Cypress
mulch does not provide any superior attributes, and alternatives, such as pine
straw, pine bark nuggets, and eucalyptus mulch all provide the benefits of
mulch without destroying coastal wetlands. Despite sustainable options, entire
swamps are being clear-cut to produce mulch.
“I have been following trucks from clear-cuts in the Atchafalaya Basin to a facility in West Baton Rouge
Parish that is solely producing cypress mulch from whole trees. Our pictures
show thousands of bags of cypress mulch being filled there, and those same bags
end up in the gardening departments of Wal-Mart, Home Depot, and Lowe’s,” said
Dean Wilson, Atchafalaya Basinkeeper. “Subsequent investigation with flyovers
also have confirmed the cypress mulch operation.”
Even without the threat of a wholesale mulch industry,
cypress-tupelo forests throughout the Gulf are already stressed, and the
sustainability of cypress harvesting has been questioned. Referencing the
Governor’s Coastal Wetland Conservation and Use Science Working Group Report,
Dr. Shaffer, a member of the group, explained, “From saltwater intrusion to
increased levels of flooding, cypress forests in Louisiana are already in danger, and there
are many swamps that will never grow back once they are cut.”
Cypress forests in Louisiana and throughout the Gulf region also provide
important habitat for wildlife, including threatened and endangered species
like the Louisiana black bear, and forty
percent of the migratory birds that fly through North
America.
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